Difference between revisions of "Type 2 Ho-I"
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|title=History | |title=History | ||
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+ | The upgrading of the [[Type 97 Chi-Ha]] to use a high velocity Type 1 47mm cannon greatly improved its anti-tank capabilities but at the cost of a much weaker high explosive round. The Type 2 Ho-I was designed to help fill this roll by mounting an Type 99 75mm cannon inside a new turret onto the chassis of the Chi-He, turning it into a close support tank. Due to material shortages it wasn't possible to put the Ho-I into mass production and only 30 were converted from existing Chi-He tanks. Like most of Japan's more advance tank designs all the of Ho-I were kept on the Japanese homeland in preparation of the expected Allied invasion. | ||
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+ | ==See Also== | ||
+ | *[[Type 1 Chi-He]] | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
− | *[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ | + | *[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_2_Ho-I Wikipedia] |
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 08:35, 29 May 2014
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History
The upgrading of the Type 97 Chi-Ha to use a high velocity Type 1 47mm cannon greatly improved its anti-tank capabilities but at the cost of a much weaker high explosive round. The Type 2 Ho-I was designed to help fill this roll by mounting an Type 99 75mm cannon inside a new turret onto the chassis of the Chi-He, turning it into a close support tank. Due to material shortages it wasn't possible to put the Ho-I into mass production and only 30 were converted from existing Chi-He tanks. Like most of Japan's more advance tank designs all the of Ho-I were kept on the Japanese homeland in preparation of the expected Allied invasion.
See Also
References
. . . .